Irish authorities have gained access to one of the long locked Bitcoin wallets tied to a major criminal asset seizure case. The breakthrough gave Ireland Criminal Assets Bureau access to about 500 Bitcoin, worth roughly $35.5 million at recent prices.
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For years, the seized Bitcoin could not be touched because the access codes were missing. Now that has changed, at least in part. The Irish Times reported that CAB, working with Europol, opened one wallet and recovered 500 Bitcoin from a case linked to convicted drug trafficker Clifton Collins.
The wider case goes back to Collins buying Bitcoin in 2011 and 2012 with proceeds from a cannabis operation. He spread the holdings across 12 wallets, but wrote the access details on a single document that was later lost. Earlier reporting said the codes had been hidden inside a fishing rod case that disappeared after the property was cleared out.
Irish authorities have not explained how the wallet was opened. What they have said is that Europol supplied “highly complex technical expertise and decryption resources” that helped make the recovery possible. Even after that step, most of the seized Bitcoin still appears to remain locked. Based on recent reporting, the untouched balance is still worth hundreds of millions of euro.
For crypto users, the story is a reminder of a basic rule in Bitcoin custody. Control of the private keys controls the coins. Once access data is lost, recovery is often impossible unless investigators or forensic specialists find another route in. In this case, Ireland has finally found one for at least part of the stash. That last point is an inference based on the reported recovery of one wallet after years of failed access.
They accessed 500 Bitcoin from one seized wallet.
The seized holdings were spread across 12 wallets.
The wallets were linked to Clifton Collins, a convicted Irish drug trafficker.
The access codes were lost after being stored in a fishing rod case that later went missing.
Europol supported the operation with technical and decryption expertise